ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece has finalised a deal with its official creditors on the coal-fired plants the country will sell to comply with an EU court ruling, Greek Energy Minister George Stathakis said on Friday.

FILE PHOTO - Greek Economy Minister George Stathakis arrives for a meeting with representatives of the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the euro zone's rescue fund, European Stability Mechanism, at a hotel in Athens, August 8, 2015. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou

The issue was at the top of the agenda of talks between Greece and its European Union and International creditors, who are reviewing the country’s bailout progress on energy and labour market reforms, on fiscal targets and privatisations.

Under its latest international bailout signed in 2015, Greece agreed that PPC, which is 51 percent owned by the state, would sell plants equal to about 40 percent of its coal-fired capacity by June next year after a European court ruled that the utility had abused its dominant position in the coal market.

“The timetable for the conclusion is the end of 2018... the action will start in June,” Stathakis told reporters.